Strain Nancy West, Beth Pratt-Sitaula, and Shelley Olds (UNAVCO) expanded from work by Vince Cronin (Baylor University) Earth’s crust is deforming. While people who live through earthquakes know this from shaking, rolling ground that rumbles like thunder, the deformation can also be so subtle that you would never notice it. Unlike scientists measuring Earth in 1905 (Fig. 1), scientists can now use precise instruments to measure the changes. Global Positioning System (GPS) stations firmly affixed to the ground are one type of instrument used for this purpose (Fig. 2). These instruments are so sensitive they detect changes in their position as small as millimeters per year. Well over a 1000 permanent GPS stations have been installed throughout North America, but concentrated in the western United States. Much of their data is available on-line, at UNAVCO, for anyone to use, for free. (Search for "GPS velocity.") Figure 1. A surveying team in California. Department of Agriculture, 1905. Figure 2. A modern GPS unit that is precise enough for research on crustal deformation. This write-up is to help you understand deformation of the crust. In the realm of geology, strain refers to the distortion of Earth’s crust. You can see strain in rocks that were stressed long ago or measure it with GPSs as it happens today, this very day. Segments of the crust change their shape—they are strained—but they also move as a block (“translation”) and spin as a block (“rotation”). Strain, translation, and rotation are collectively called “deformation.” Why would you care about strain? It builds up slowly over time, and if strain surpasses rock’s strength, they fail. Rocks snap, fracture, break, crack, buckle and release pent up energy in earthquakes. The energy released threatens the safety of people in swaths of North America, and not just in California. (Search for “historical damaging earthquakes” to learn where damaging quakes have occurred.) And, in the event of a damaging earthquake, even people who live far away can feel the economic and social impacts. Although this unit on strain focuses on data from GPS units, this article begins with strain we can see in rocks you could hold in your hand. Strain occurred for long enough that the rocks changed shape—what is called “finite strain.” This way you can have examples in mind as you Questions or comments please contact education – at - unavco.org Page 1 Student version. Version October 15, 2014 Strain learn about strain occurring over geologically short periods like days or years that is measured by a GPS—“infinitesimal strain.” You will also work with physical models of strain to learn how geologists and geodesists (scientists who measure Earth) describe strain and deformation mathematically. 1. One-dimensional strain Extension or elongation When a geologist has the good fortune of seeing a linear feature in nature that is broken into segments, she knows that it ha been strained. And, she can measure how much it has been pulled apart. Examples are belemnites, fossil organisms related to squids. (Fig. 3.) Figure 3. Belemnites scattered throughout a slab of sedimentary rock. These have not been strained. Selim, 2011. A belemnite that has been pulled into segments with some other material between them has been strained. (Fig. 4.) With your imagination you can extract the intervening material and reconstruct the original shape and length of the belemnite. This fossil has obviously been pulled apart: it has been deformed, strained, extended, and stretched. Let’s define the last two terms. Figure 4. Photo of a belemnite from the Alps. Jurassic. Coin is 2 cm in diameter. WeFt, 2007. You might have explored extension with physical models such as a bungee cord attached to a plank or a compressional spring. If you did those activities, you have already calculated extension. You have also seen how extension relates to GPS displacement vectors. Let’s look at extension with this geological example of belemnites. You might recall that extension is defined as the ratio between the change in length of a feature and its original length. In the case of the belemnite in Figure 3, you could add up all of the gaps between fossils to determine the increase in length. And you could add up the lengths of all of the fossil pieces to know its original length. Divide the gaps by the pieces and you have the extension, e. Questions or comments please contact [email protected] Page 2s Student version. Version February 15, 2014 Strain Let’s look at the measurement and calculation generally—for the bungee cord, belemnite, or crust as measured with GPS units. A linear feature has an initial length, lo, and changes to a final length, lf. (Fig.5.) Figure 5. An idealized linear feature that has been extended—or elongated. lo is the original length. lf is the length after straining. lf - lo is the difference between them--or the change in length. In this more general example, lo is 3. The feature is elongated so that lf is equal to 4. The ! ! ! extension, e, is ! ! or 0.33. Try to calculate the extension of the belemnites in Figure 4. Do !! you need the scale? What if the linear feature is shortened instead of lengthened, as with compressional springs? We use the same equation (Fig. 6). The only change is that the value representing extension is negative. Figure 6. An idealized linear feature that has been shortened. Now that you have measured extension and stretch and learned about them, let’s return to the belemnites briefly. Notice how the belemnites in Figure 3 lie every which way. If the rock slab had been extended or stretched in any single direction, some of the belemnites would look like Questions or comments please contact [email protected] Page 3s Student version. Version February 15, 2014 Strain the belemnite in Figure 4. Others would have been distorted in other ways because the atoms, ions, and molecules would have been pulled apart in the direction of the extension. But we don’t see that, so we can infer that this slab has not been extended, elongated, stretched, or strained. (If it’s been translated or rotated, it would be deformed—but not strained.) An historical geological example Belemnites are ancient; the examples shown in Figures 3 and 4 are from the lower Jurassic, 199.6 to 175.6 million years ago. You can see a more recent, but historical, example from the 1906 San Francisco earthquake (Fig. 7). Look carefully at the rails in the foreground: they were pulled apart as the sediments underlying them spread during the magnitude 7.8 quake. (Note that this extension was a secondary effect of the strike-slip motion (or “shearing)” along the San Andreas fault.) Perhaps with clever detective work on the dimensions of paving stones and rails used in 1906, you can estimate the extension and stretching that occurred in this area of San Francisco earthquake. Figure 7. Rails separated when sediment settled during the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. Gilbert, 1906. You’ve seen strain in linear objects like belemnites and train rails; these are one-dimensional examples. Let’s now broaden the idea of strain and work in two-dimensions. Questions or comments please contact [email protected] Page 4s Student version. Version February 15, 2014 Strain 2. Two-dimensional strain--description Geological examples of strain in two-dimensions When a tiny shell fragment rolls around below tropical seas, layers of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) can build up on them. Round grains that look like cream of wheat develop. They are called “ooids,” and the sedimentary rock that forms are “oolites.” (Fig.8.) When oolites are strained, the round grains deform into ovoids in three dimensions and ovals or ellipses in two, as in Figure 9. Figure 8. Photograph through a microscope of Jurassic ooids in the Carmel Formation, Utah. Wilson, 2012. Figure 9. Photomicrograph of Cambro- Ordovician deformed ooids from South Mountain, Maryland. Cloos, 1947. A physical model in two-dimensions To help you understand two-dimensional strain, you might have played with a physical model made from a high-tech stretchy T-shirt. Three students in Figure 10 are experimenting with strain in two dimensions with this setup. Figure 10. Students tugging on stretchy tee-shirt to see how a circle deforms. Cronin, 2012. Questions or comments please contact [email protected] Page 5s Student version. Version February 15, 2014 Strain Figure 11 idealizes their pulling—and your pulling-- with a cartoon that uses vectors to show three corners pulled exactly evenly. In this case, balanced pulling stretches the circle uniformly, and the circle dilates. Figure 11. A more technical description and idealized rendition of the tee-shirt strained by three people pulling against each other. In a different idealized scenario, if one student pulls hard while the other two keep their hands stationary the cartoon would look like Figure 12. What happens to the circle? Figure 12. An idealized rendition of the tee-shirt pulled by one person, with the other two standing steady. 3. Two-dimensional strain—mathematical descriptions and how it happens Strain ellipses Geologists describe the ellipses that develop when tee-shirts, ooids, cartoon circles, Silly Putty® and stacks of cards distort by drawing two “strain axes.” They draw one axis the length of the ellipse and another across the ellipse. If you did the activities with Silly Putty® and the stack of cards, you saw circles deform to ellipses and (with the cards) the two axes change orientation. Figure 13 shows the distortion of a circle into an ellipse.
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